WASHINGTON - The United States left open the possibility on Wednesday that US
diplomats could meet one-on-one with Iranian officials on the sidelines of a
conference of Iraq's neighbors in Baghdad this weekend.
A woman walks past a mural on a wall at Palestine Square in
Tehran, March 4, 2007. [Reuters]
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State Department spokesman Sean
McCormack said he did not know whether the US diplomats would hold bilateral
talks with Iranian officials on Saturday but he did not rule it out.
"We will see what interactions may come about," McCormack told reporters.
"I'm not going to point you in the direction of any particular diplomatic
interaction, nor am I going to wave you off of any one occurring." he added.
US ambassador to Iraq, Zalmay Khalilzad, and the State Department's Iraq
advisor, David Satterfield, will represent the United States at Saturday's
meeting, which was called by Iraq to boost support for the government and to
curb violence.
Iran's deputy foreign minister is expected to attend the meeting, making it a
rare occasion when representatives from Tehran and Washington will come together
to discuss Iraq.
The nations are at loggerheads over Iran's nuclear program and the United
States accuse Iran of meddling in Iraq and supplying explosives used
against US troops. Tehran denies any role in supplying arms.
McCormack said the United States wanted to discuss so-called EFPs at the
meeting - the explosively formed projectiles US ed against US military patrols
in Iraq and which Washington says are coming over the border from Iran.
"You bet we're going to raise it," said McCormack.
"We're going to take every possible opportunity that we can take to ensure
that our troops are protected in-theater. And if that means having a discussion
with the Iranian representative in the context of this meeting, yeah, we're
going to take that opportunity," he added.
McCormack reiterated the US position that any bilateral meeting with Iran
would be restricted to Iraqi security issues and would not touch on Iran's
nuclear dossier.
Washington has said it will only negotiate directly with Iran on the nuclear
issue once it has abandoned uranium enrichment, which Iran says is for peaceful
power purposes and the United States says is aimed at building a bomb.
The United States, which broke off ties with Iran shortly after its 1979
revolution, and other major powers are working on a UN resolution to impose new
sanctions on Iran over its nuclear program.
Saturday's meeting, to be attended by Iraq's neighbors, Egypt and the Arab
League as well as the permanent members of the UN Security Council, is seen
laying the groundwork for a meeting of ministers expected early next month.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice is expected to attend the April
meeting but a firm date has not been set.
Washington has in the past been critical of Arab nations for not doing enough
to support Iraq's government and McCormack said he hoped countries attending
Saturday's meeting would come prepared to discuss what commitment they would
make to help.